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comment by ecib
ecib  ·  4170 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: [48 hours] Edward Snowden's Half-Baked Revolution

Would you have been able to make this purchase without a physical bookstore? Just curious as I'm assuming you probably wouldn't have bee able to be taken with the quality from a picture snapped and posted online or a nice description.





mk  ·  4170 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'm almost certain of it. On a positive note, I picked it up at a new bookstore that just opened up in my town. I'm starting to change my thinking about the fate of paper books. I have a Kindle, but rarely use it. Unless I am traveling, I prefer a paper book. Also, ebooks are priced too high considering the much lower costs of distribution and reproduction. Finally, DRM fucking sucks. I want to be able to give my books to friends, and I don't want to be locked into a AmazonLibraryTM forever.

humanodon  ·  4170 days ago  ·  link  ·  

It seems to me that books may move into a more luxurious niche. The image of a book is too strong to fade away completely as a symbol of learning. A similar process might be seen if we consider tanning, as in, getting some sun.

Fashion is of course, dictated by economics. Largely, this has to do with outwardly displaying the fact that one does not have to labor. Thus, impractical cuts of clothing. In Victorian England especially, this meant avoiding the sun and so, pale skin was desirable. Now, having a tan means that one can afford to travel, or spend leisure time outdoors.

Obviously, the parallel isn't perfect, but if the trend in electronic books continues, eventually I think physical books may come to signify that one has the means to purchase and enjoy an environmentally destructive form of media and/or one that takes up a lot of physical space.

mk  ·  4170 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    I think physical books may come to signify that one has the means to purchase and enjoy an environmentally destructive form of media and/or one that takes up a lot of physical space.

I wonder how much less destructive ebook readers are. I assume they are, but I wonder how often people replace their readers, and how the figures work out. I would guess that one reader is more destructive than one book.

humanodon  ·  4169 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Hmm. That's a good point. I would expect that right now it's low since there's only so much an e-reader can do. But if it goes the way of the mp3 player and becomes better integrated with something more replaceable, like tablets or phones then that certainly might change.

ecib  ·  4169 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    I'm almost certain of it.

A kind of sad irony that ebooks effectively attack the few remaining strengths paperback books have. Can't sell the high-end without the showroom.

    Unless I am traveling, I prefer a paper book.

Funny, I'm the opposite here. I'm about to head to Mexico and my criteria for travel reading is the following:

1. Is it pool/beach friendly? tablets don't like direct blazing sunlight for hours a a time, get hard to read (depending on model), don't like water sand and oil, etc.

2. Can I shove it anywhere at any time and not care if the integrity of it is disturbed?

3. How bummed will I be if I leave it on the plane?

For me, a nice paperback beats tablets traveling across the board. You can sit on them, leave them wherever, forget them, abuse them, -doesn't really matter, and I've yet to find a tablet that is as legible as a book in the Caribbean sun at high noon.

mk  ·  4169 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Yeah, I guess I was thinking the plane. But on a beach, I definitely want a paperback.